digital

Digital gaming and the advertising landscape / Teresa de la Hera

Online Resource




digital

Woke gaming: digital challenges to opression and social injustice / edited by Kishonna L. Gray and David J. Leonard

Dewey Library - GV1469.34.S52 W65 2018




digital

Top 10 Digital Bible Studies for Spring 2020




digital

Annual Tech Report Outlines Coming Shifts in Social Media and Digital Marketing

First off, Meeker looks at the growth of internet adoption, which is slowing as regions work on new infrastructure to facilitate connection. It's amazing to consider that around 50% of the world is still not connected to the internet, which highlights the opportunities for expansion, but also, the challenges now faced in getting the rest of the world online.

complete article




digital

Coping with illness digitally / Stephen A. Rains

Browsery R118.R24 2018




digital

Technology, activism, and social justice in a digital age / edited by John G. McNutt

Browsery HM851.T42995 2018




digital

Luxury Retail and Digital Management: Developing Customer Experience in a Digital World, 2nd Edition


 

Develop a winning customer experience in the digital world

Luxury consumers are changing – they come from all over the world, they are young and they are digital natives. How can luxury brands that have built themselves as pure physical players adapt their business model and practices to address their expectations without abandoning their luxury DNA?

Luxury Retail and Digital Management, 2ndEdition sets focus on the major retailing challenges and customer



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digital

The digital banal: new media and American literature and culture / Zara Dinnen

Hayden Library - PS169.T4 D56 2018




digital

Teaching with digital humanities: tools and methods for nineteenth-century American literature / edited by Jennifer Travis and Jessica DeSpain

Hayden Library - PS44.T43 2019




digital

Digital filters using MATLAB Lars Wanhammar, Tapio Saramäki

Online Resource




digital

Digital signatures : the impact of digitization on popular music sound / Ragnhild Brøvig-Hanssen and Anne Danielsen

Brøvig-Hanssen, Ragnhild, author




digital

Getting to the Heart of Digital Accessibility

Quick! Think of the word “developer” or “coder” — what’s the first thing that comes to mind? Maybe a whiteish male in his twenties living in a busy metropolis, wearing a nerdy t-shirt and hoodie? Someone a bit like Mark Zuckerberg? Or maybe a younger Bill Gates or Sergey Brin? Any of the dudes from the HBO series Silicon Valley, perhaps? Certainly no one like me.

By tech standards, I’m old. I’m also female and a mother. I live in a midwestern town you’ve never heard of and will never visit — a town where the cows vastly outnumber the people. My hair color is (almost) natural and is no longer part of the ROYGBIV collection, so I have no perceived conference street cred. I own about a thousand geeky T-shirts, but never actually wear them in public, opting for more “girly” attire (or so was pointed out by a male colleague). On the surface, I look more suited to taking notes at a PTA meeting than writing code. I’m a bit of an outsider. A tech misfit.

So when my 11-year-old daughter finished her recent coding camp and excitedly declared, “Now I’m a real developer, Mom, just like you!” there was the usual parent pride, but also a small piece of me that cringed. Because, as much as I support the STEM fields, and want the next generation of girls to be coding wizard-unicorn-ninjas, I really don’t want my own daughter to be a developer. The rationale behind this bold (and maybe controversial) statement comes from a place of protection. The tech world we live in today is far from perfect. I’ve endured my share of misogyny, self-doubt, and sexual harassment. Why wouldn’t I want to protect her from all of that?

The (diversity) elephant in the (computer) room

You’ve heard this story before: there is not enough diversity in tech. This puzzling trend seems to continue year after year, even though numerous studies show that by including more people from underrepresented communities, a company can increase its innovation, employee retention, and bottom line. Even with the recent push and supposed support for diversity and inclusivity from many Fortune 500 companies, women and female-identifying people still only hold 20% of all top tech jobs.

The data from FY 2018 shows that the number of women in technical roles at three of the top tech giants was 24% for Adobe, 26% for Google, and 22% for Facebook. While these numbers show that there is still not enough representation for women, these numbers do reflect a slight increase from the previous year (FY 2017: Adobe 22%, Google 25%, Facebook 15%). But even with this upward trend of hiring women in tech roles, the marginal growth rate has not caught up with the real world. The tech workforce is seriously out of touch with reality if, in 2019, a demographic (women) that represents more than half the global population is still considered a minority.

Sometimes this lack of diversity at the top level is blamed on a “pipeline” issue. The logic being: “If there are not enough girls who learn to code, then there will not be enough women who can code.” However, programs aimed at teaching girls how to code have skyrocketed in the past few years. Girls now make up about half of the enrollment in high-school coding classes and are scoring almost identically to their male classmates on standardized math and science tests, yet, young women make up only 18% of all Computer Science degrees. I have to wonder if this steep drop in interest has more to do with lack of representation in the tech sphere, than with girls and young women simply not being “smart enough” or “not interested” in working with code? At the very least, the lack of representation certainly doesn’t help.

Of course, the diversity picture becomes even more abysmal when you consider other underrepresented groups such as people of color, people from the LGBTQ community, and people with disabilities. And while I really don’t like glossing over these deeper diversity issues in tech, because they are abundant and are much more grotesque failings than the male/female ratio, I also don’t feel qualified to speak about these issues. I encourage you to look to and value the voices of others who can speak with higher authority on these deeper diversity issues, such as Ire Aderinokun, Taelur Alexis, Imani Barbarin, Angie Jones, Fatima Khalid, Tatiana Mac, Charlie Owen, Cherry Rae, and so many others. And for those readers who are new to the topic of diversity in tech, watch Tatiana Mac’s recent conference talk How Privilege Defines Performance — it’s well worth the 35 minutes of your life.

The four stages in the digital accessibility journey

However you look at it, the numbers don’t lie. There are some pretty significant diversity issues in tech. So how do we fix this issue before the next wave of young developers join the tech workforce? Simple: teach developers to write accessible code.

This may seem like a joke to some and stretch to others, but hear me out. When we talk about accessible code, what we are really talking about at its core is inclusiveness. The actual process of writing accessible code involves rules and standards, tests and tools; but inclusive development is more abstract than that. It’s a shift in thinking. And when we rethink our approach to development, we go beyond just the base level of simple code functionality. We instead think, how is this code consumed? How can we make it even more intelligible and easier for people to use? Inclusive development means making something valuable, not just accessible, to as many people as we can.

That line of thinking is a bit abstract, so let’s go through an example. Let’s say you are tasked with updating the color contrast between the text on a webpage or app and the background. What happens at each stage in the accessibility journey?

Stage 1: Awareness — You are brand new to digital accessibility and are still trying to understand what it is and how you can implement changes in your daily workflow. You may be aware that there is a set of digital accessibility guidelines that other developers follow, but you are a bit hazy on what it all means in a practical sense.

Stage 2: Knowledge — You know a bit more about digital accessibility and feel comfortable using a few testing tools, so you run an automated accessibility test on your website and it flags a possible issue with the color contrast. Based on your awareness of the guidelines, you know the color contrast ratio between the text and the background needs to be a certain number and that you need a tool to test this.

Stage 3: Practice — Feeling more confident in your knowledge of digital accessibility rules and best practices, you use a tool to measure the color contrast ratio between the text and the background. Then based on the output of the tool, you modify the hex code to meet the color contrast ratio guidelines and retest to confirm you have met the accessibility requirements for this issue.

Stage 4: Understanding — You understand that the accessibility guidelines and tools are created with people in mind, and that code is secondary to all of that. One is the means, and the other is the end. In the color contrast example, you understand that people with low-vision or colorblindness need these color contrast changes in order to actually see the words on your web page.

This is a bit of an oversimplification of the process. But I hope you get the gist — that there are different stages of digital accessibility knowledge and understanding. True beginners may not be to even stage one, but I am finding that group rarer and rarer these days. The word about digital accessibility seems to be out! Which is great; but that’s only the first hurdle. What I’m seeing now is that a lot of people stop at Stage 2: Knowledge or Stage 3: Practice — where you are aware of the digital accessibility guidelines, have some testing tools in your back pocket, and know how to fix some of the issues reported, but haven’t quite connected the dots to the humans they impact.

From the standpoint of getting daily stuff done, stages two and three are okay stopping points. But what happens when the things you need to do are too complex for a quick fix, or you have no buy-in from your peers or management? I feel that once we get to Stage 4: Understanding, and really get why these kinds of changes are needed, people will be more motivated to make those changes regardless of the challenges involved. When you arrive at stage four, you have gone beyond knowing the basic rules, testing, and coding. You recognize that digital accessibility is not just a “nice to have” but a “must have” and it becomes about quality of life for real people. This is digital inclusion. This is something you can’t unsee, you can’t unlearn, and you can’t ignore.

Making digital accessibility a priority — not a requirement

In my role as an accessibility trainer, I like to kick-off each session with the question: “What are you hoping to learn today about digital accessibility?” I ask this question to establish a rapport with the audience and to understand where everyone is in their accessibility journey, but I am also evaluating the level of company and individual buy-in too. There is nothing worse than showing up to teach a group that does not care to be taught. If I hear the words “I am only here because I have to be” — I know it will be an uphill battle to get them anywhere close to Stage 4: Understanding, so I mentally regroup and aim for another stage.

In my experience, when companies and their leaders say “Digital accessibility is a requirement,” nine times out of ten there is a motivating factor behind this sweeping declaration (for example, impending litigation, or at least the fear of it). When changes are framed as mandatory and packaged as directives from on high with little additional context, people can be resistant and will find excuses to fight or challenge the declaration, and any change can become an uphill battle. Calling something “mandatory” only speaks to Stage 1: Awareness.

By swapping out one word from the original declaration and saying “Digital accessibility is a priority,” companies and their leaders have reframed the conversation with their employees. When changes are framed as “working towards a solution” and discussed openly and collaboratively, people feel like they are part of the process and are more open to embracing change. In the long run, embracing change becomes part of a company’s culture and leads to innovation (and, yes, inclusion) on all levels. Calling something a priority speaks to Stage 4: Understanding.

Some of the excuses I often hear from clients for not prioritizing accessibility is that it is too difficult, too costly, and/or too time consuming — but is that really the case? In the same accessibility training, I lead an exercise where we look at a website with an accessibility testing tool and review any issues that came up. With the group’s help we plot out the “impact to user” versus the “remediation effort” on the part of the team. From group to group, while the plots are slightly different, one commonality is that close to 80% of the errors plotted fall into the quadrant of “simple to fix” for the team, but they also fall under “high impact” to the user. Based on this empirical data, I won’t buy the argument from clients who say that accessibility is too difficult and costly and time consuming anymore. It comes down to whether it’s a priority — for each individual and for the company as a whole.

What will your coding legacy be?

The infinite monkey theorem states that a monkey hitting keys at random on a typewriter for an infinite amount of time will eventually type any given text, such as the complete works of William Shakespeare. So by that same logic, a programmer hitting keys at random on a computer for an infinite amount of time will almost surely produce a website that is accessible. But where is the thought process? Where is the human element? While all the things we’ve already talked about — awareness, education, and prioritization of accessibility are important steps in making the digital world more inclusive to all — without intent, we are just going to keep randomly tapping away at our computers, repeating the same mistakes over and over again. The intent behind the code has to be part of the process, otherwise accessibility is just another task that has no meaning.

Maybe I’m naive, but I’d like to think we’ve come to a point in our society where we want our work lives to have meaning. And that we don’t want to just hear about the positive change that is happening, but want to be part of the change. Digital accessibility is a place where this can happen! Not only does understanding and writing purpose-driven code help people with disabilities in the short-run, I believe strongly that is key to solving the overarching diversity issue in tech in the long-run. Developers who reach Stage 4: Understanding, and who prioritize accessible code because they understand it’s fundamentally about people, will also be the ones who help create and cultivate an inclusive environment where people from more diverse backgrounds are also prioritized and accepted in the tech world.

Because when you strip away all the styles, all the mark-up, all the cool features from a website or app — what’s left? People. And honestly, the more I learn about digital accessibility, the more I realize it’s not about the code at all. Digital accessibility is rooted in the user; and, while I (and countless others) can certainly teach you how to write accessible code, and build you tools, patterns, and libraries to use, I realize we can’t teach you to care. That is a choice you have to make yourself. So think for a moment — what are you leaving the next generation of developers with all that inaccessible code you haven’t given much thought to? Is it the coding legacy you really want to leave? I challenge you to do better for my daughter, her peers, and for the countless others who are not fully represented in the tech community today.




digital

Jewellers use digital platform, offer discount to sell gold this Akshaya Tritiya

"As we started getting a lot of enquires from our regular customers, we have started taking Akshay Tritiya bookings online from 21st April onwards on our e-commerce platforms. The same will be delivered to the customers post lockdown ends," Aditya Pethe, director, WHP Jewellers said.




digital

Jewellers witness encouraging response from customers on their digital platforms for Akshaya Tritiya

Mr. Ajoy Chawla, CEO, Jewellery Division at Titan Company Limited said, "All 328 Tanishq stores remain shut this year and hence it would be unfair to compare numbers with last year. But the overall customer response to tanishq.co.in from key metros and even with tier-2 and tier-3 towns has been extremely encouraging.




digital

Changing digital geographies: technologies, environments and people / Jessica McLean

Online Resource




digital

Digital cultural heritage / Horst Kremers, editor

Online Resource




digital

Mapping the nation: GIS making a difference now - locally, nationally, globally: GIS inspiring what's next - accelerating digital transformation.

Rotch Library - G70.212.M37 2019




digital

Digital geographies / edited by James Ash, Rob Kitchin, Agnieszka Leszczynski

Rotch Library - G70.217.G46 D54 2019




digital

The business of platforms: strategy in the age of digital competition, innovation, and power / Michael A. Cusumano, Annabelle Gawer, David B. Yoffie

Dewey Library - HD45.C87 2019




digital

Logistics management: strategies and instruments for digitalizing and decarbonizing supply chains - proceedings of the German Academic Association for Business Research, Halle 2019 / Christian Bierwirth, Thomas Kirschstein, Dirk Sackmann, editors

Online Resource




digital

Enterprise content and search management for building digital platforms / Shailesh Shivakumar

Online Resource




digital

Managing transformation projects: tracing lessons from the Industrial to the Digital Revolution / Mark Kozak-Holland, Chris Procter

Online Resource




digital

Enterprise Governance of Information Technology: Achieving Alignment and Value in Digital Organizations / Steven De Haes, Win Vam Grembergen, Anant Joshi, Tim Huygh

Online Resource




digital

Sino-German intercultural management: self-organization, communication and conflict resolution in a digital age / Joanne Huang

Online Resource




digital

Project management under internet era: how to respond to challenging changes in the digital era / Shaopei Lin, Dan Huang

Online Resource




digital

Understanding the business of global media in the digital age / Micky Lee and Dal Yong Jin

Lee, Micky, author




digital

The audience commodity in a digital age : revisiting a critical theory of commercial media / edited by Lee McGuigan & Vincent Manzerolle




digital

Television 2.0 : viewer and fan engagement with digital TV / Rhiannon Bury

Bury, Rhiannon, author




digital

Interdisciplinary interaction design : a visual guide to basic theories, models and ideas for thinking and designing for interactive web design and digital device experiences / James Pannafino

Pannafino, James




digital

Communication, digital media and everyday life / Tony Chalkley, Mitchell Hobbs, Adam Brown, Toija Cinque, Brad Warren, Mark Finn

Chalkley, Tony, author




digital

Stories : screen narrative in the digital era / edited by Ian Christie and Annie van den Oever




digital

Theorizing digital cultures / Grant Bollmer

Bollmer, Grant, author




digital

Digital media & society / Simon Lindgren

Lindgren, Simon, author




digital

Precision health and medicine: a digital revolution in healthcare / Arash Shaban-Nejad, Martin Michalowski, editors

Online Resource




digital

Pipeline spatial data modeling and pipeline WebGIS: digital oil and gas pipeline: research and practice / Zhenpei Li

Online Resource




digital

Digital Communication Techniques


 

There have been considerable developments in information and communication technology. This has led to an increase in the number of applications available, as well as an increase in their variability. As such, it has become important to understand and master problems related to establishing radio links, the layout and flow of source data, the power available from antennas, the selectivity and sensitivity of receivers, etc.



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digital

Cyberformalism: the histories of linguistic forms in the digital archive / Daniel Shore, Johns Hopkins University Press

Barker Library - P291.S466 2018




digital

Work and labor in the digital age / edited by Steven P. Vallas and Anne Kovalainen

Online Resource




digital

Digital phenotyping and mobile sensing: new developments in psychoinformatics / Harald Baumeister, Christian Montag, editors

Online Resource




digital

None of your damn business: privacy in the United States from the gilded age to the digital age / Lawrence Cappello

Hayden Library - BF637.P74 C36 2019




digital

iProspect India bags SBI’s digital mandate

iProspect India will handle the entire gamut of digital duties – paid media, social media, creative, SEO (search engine optimisation) and ORM (online reputation management) for the brand.




digital

Sports marketing firm IOS Sports launches digital wing Influrate

The company claims that with an access to nearly 50 million followers, Influrate will be a one stop solution for brands who are investing in digital campaigns. A confluence of Influence and Accelerate, Influrate is the combined digital handles of top athletes of IOS Sports under one common umbrella, which will allow brands to reach nearly 50 million people through a single post.




digital

Proceedings. IDEAS Workshop on Medical Information Systems: The Digital Hospital [electronic journal].

IEEE Computer Society




digital

Proceedings Fourth International Conference on 3-D Digital Imaging and Modeling. 3DIM 2003 [electronic journal].

IEEE Computer Society




digital

Proceedings. Fifth International Conference on 3-D Digital Imaging and Modeling [electronic journal].

IEEE Computer Society




digital

International Journal of Computing and Digital Systems [electronic journal].

University of Bahrain




digital

Forensic Science International: Digital Investigation [electronic journal].

Elsevier




digital

First International Conference on the Digital Society (ICDS'07) [electronic journal].

IEEE Computer Society




digital

Digital library perspectives [electronic journal].




digital

Digital journalism [electronic journal].